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  1. #1
    Nostradamas Jr.
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    Nov. 17, 2005, 1:18AM

    Rockets seek true iden y
    Team has two big answers, but lacks confidence
    By JONATHAN FEIGEN
    Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle




    SAN ANTONIO — The Rockets, above all teams, surely must know who and what they are. The best teams do, and though the Rockets cannot claim to be a member of that exclusive club, few teams seem more obviously defined.

    The Rockets are Tracy McGrady, the way his Tour de France team is Lance Armstrong. They are Yao Ming, as if anyone could not notice the 7-foot-6 combination of immense size and skills. And they are a team of players entirely selected to complement Yao and McGrady.

    Yet, the Rockets are trying to figure it all out. On some level, they know these things the way a medical student can down caffeine and study around the clock until he memorizes the answers. But the real tests don't come until the heat of the ER or fourth quarter.

    "This team," McGrady said, "is still searching as far as knowing our iden y."

    While they search, the Rockets will face two teams that know who and what they are best, and best demon-strate the value of never straying far from themselves.

    The San Antonio Spurs, whom the Rockets face tonight, and Detroit Pistons, who will be waiting for them in Houston on Friday, went seven games in the NBA Finals before the Spurs emerged. Between them, they have won the past two(actually three) NBA championships and no matter what changes have come to their roster, almost never stray from what has made them the league's superpowers.

    "They are the best two teams in the league," Rockets coach Jeff Van Gundy said. "A lot of it comes down to that they do a lot of what every team wants to do, but don't do it as much. They defend both longer and harder and are more efficient in their games offensively than the other teams in the league.

    "There's no magic formula. Everyone knows what the formula is. It's just a matter of can you get players to do it longer."

    The Spurs and Pistons will stick with their game plans and only occasionally break a play to explore something else. Everything doesn't work. Both can go through offensive droughts as much of the Finals demonstrated. But when they face late-game or defensive pressure, the Spurs and Pistons rarely stray from themselves.

    The Rockets and most teams become more likely to crack.

    "We don't know our iden y yet," McGrady said. "We haven't been playing like that. Sometimes we play inside-out. Other times, we're not getting the ball in the paint at all. What are we going to be?

    "Last year, we were much more of a team that had at ude and a team that really trusted in one another. Right now, this year we don't have that. We don't have the at ude. We're still searching."


    Lacking the will
    Some of the iden y that Van Gundy is trying to develop is pretty basic stuff — defend, rebound, compete. But each of those fundamentals are, not coincidentally, on the top of the Spurs' and Pistons' checklists.

    "We know what wins and what loses, and we don't have the willingness at this present moment to do what it takes to win every time," Van Gundy said. "What it takes to win is to defend, get defensive rebounds, handle the ball, get it inside to score in the paint, go inside-out and give up a good shot to get a great shot.

    "It is true for every team. If you want to win, that's what your iden y will be."

    The Rockets especially believe in shutting down the lane defensively and getting the ball to the paint, but have done neither with any regularity. Van Gundy even tweaked many of the team's playing rotations to help close up the paint. But until playing Minnesota, generally a jump-shooting team, the Rockets' defense was still springing leaks.

    "Coach has made some changes to make up for some of our weaknesses, different rotations," guard David Wesley said. "We've always been a close-the-paint-down team, but we're trying to close the paint down even more, to make them shoot more shots outside. But we're still giving up drive-bys. We're still giving up stuff. It's frustrating when we're specifically trying not to do that."

    The biggest frustration, however, might be the Rockets' play late in games. That could be starting to come around. Though they were never in the Boston game, they closed out wins in New Jersey and Minneapolis by not reinventing themselves with every late-game possession.


    Mental strength
    But last week, after three consecutive fourth-quarter breakdowns, Van Gundy said, "I think our game stinks when it counts the most.

    "It's random, undisciplined, helter-skelter, Rockets gone wild, just doing whatever we want. Because of that, we get bad results. To me, players and teams are separated by two things: Who can sustain their play longer, because everybody has some good plays in games, and who can play their best when their best is needed late.

    "The league over time has gotten a little more fragile. And yet, you look at San Antonio, you look at Detroit, one of the reasons they're so great beyond their individual skills and great coaching, is they have unbelievable mental strength to handle the good, the bad, the ups, the downs, the grind. Winning in this league is as much about outlasting through mental strength as any X and O or great players."

    That is their iden y. The Rockets are a team that knows what it should be but still can't suppress its wanderings.

  2. #2
    Multimedia Spurs
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    I like Jeff a lot.

    In spite of his un-telegenic, bald, short, dark eye-bags dourness (none of which I give about), he really loves and understands the game and coaching it.

  3. #3
    Eh, Fuck It. easjer's Avatar
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    I like Jeff a lot.

    In spite of his un-telegenic, bald, short, dark eye-bags dourness (none of which I give about), he really loves and understands the game and coaching it.
    I wholeheartedly agree. I'll like the Rockets a whole lot more when I don't live here.

  4. #4
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    From Steve Kerr's column .

    The Spurs' Southwest Division rival, the Houston Rockets, is desperately missing Bob Sura, who began the season inactive because of right-knee surgery and is not close to returning. Rockets officials wonder if Sura can come back at all this season, and if he's not available, the team will surely suffer.

    Jeff Van Gundy says Sura "gave us courage" in 2004-05 and that his confidence and swagger were a big reason for Houston's late-season surge. Without Sura, Houston lacks size and rebounding in the backcourt, a playmaker alongside Tracy McGrady and an outstanding defender at the guard spot.

  5. #5
    Ghost of Mr. K SenorSpur's Avatar
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    From Steve Kerr's column .

    The Spurs' Southwest Division rival, the Houston Rockets, is desperately missing Bob Sura, who began the season inactive because of right-knee surgery and is not close to returning. Rockets officials wonder if Sura can come back at all this season, and if he's not available, the team will surely suffer.

    Jeff Van Gundy says Sura "gave us courage" in 2004-05 and that his confidence and swagger were a big reason for Houston's late-season surge. Without Sura, Houston lacks size and rebounding in the backcourt, a playmaker alongside Tracy McGrady and an outstanding defender at the guard spot.
    I also think they'll feel the loss of Mike James. He was an explosive outside shooter with great range and could get to the basket. He wasn't a great defender or exceptionally quick or defense.

  6. #6
    Multimedia Spurs
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    "I also think they'll feel the loss of Mike James"

    yep, Mike put in some good contribs for Rockets last spring.

    Now he's gone off for 36+ pts TWICE THIS WEEK in losing efforts for Raptors, while avging 18 & 4.

    I was surprised Jeff didn't keep Mike around.

  7. #7
    Goodwill Ambassador spurs_fan_in_exile's Avatar
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    "I also think they'll feel the loss of Mike James"

    yep, Mike put in some good contribs for Rockets last spring.

    Now he's gone off for 36+ pts TWICE THIS WEEK in losing efforts for Raptors, while avging 18 & 4.

    I was surprised Jeff didn't keep Mike around.
    Amen. I felt like he was really the guy who helped steady the ship for them towards the end of the year. What surprised me more wasn't that he shipped out James, but that he got rid of him for Skip to My F'in Lou.

  8. #8
    Ghost of Mr. K SenorSpur's Avatar
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    Mike James was mentally "tough as nails" and is playoff tested. Skip "to my Lou" is a bit undisciplined and simply wanted out of Toronto.

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